Avere Offers VDI Acceleration with FXT NAS Optimization

If you haven't noticed, virtualization and cloud are reaching critical mass. That's why Avere Systems is here with some relief, via the FXT Series of NAS optimization appliances. But why should VARs start considering solutions such as Avere Systems'? The company says it's all about the numbers. Let's take a look …

Avere is calling out its competitors, alleging that in a bake-off with NetApp, Avere's FXT 2260 appliance offered "sub-90-second boot times" across 145 VMs that existed inside "multiple ESXi servers." Meanwhile, NetApp's comparable hardware had "VM boot times 113 percent longer, with as few as 16 VMs," and only offered a "marginal improvement." Avere doesn't expect you to take its word for it, so the company built out a simple comparison chart to explain all the details.

So what's Avere's secret sauce? Apparently, it's data algorithms. Instead of letting data "thrash," Avere leverages a write-caching technology which "absorbs peak VM Hypervisor writes" by shoving all the important information into "hot data" data stores. When that all-important data is needed, drives don't need to thrash, since the FXT can provide that important data instantaneously.

Avere also promises it can optimize steady-state VMS, where "80 percent of the operations are writes." This allows for overall operational efficiency during extended uptime. And if you're following along at home, you'll have noticed this kind of technology is an ongoing trend in the storage industry -- storage appliances and data solutions are using internalized tiered data structures and sophisticated math to turn high data demand into a no-sweat process. Just take a look at what XIO, Dell and Hitcahi are doing.